Post on 13-Oct-2020
Guide to a Microfilm Edition of
The Mexican Mission PapersOf John Lind
DEBORAH K. NEUBECK
Minnesota Historical Society . St. Paul . 1971
Copyright, 1971 © by the Minnesota Historical Society
Standard Book Number: 87351-066-6
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Introduction
It was in 1913 -- the "hours of Mexico's agony" -- that PresidentWoodrow Wilson selected as his personal representative in thattroubled land John Lind, a midwestern progressive and former Minnesota governor and representative in Congress~ Three years ofturmoil and civil warfare had seen the end of the thirty-five-yeardictatorship of Porfirio Diaz and the deposing of his more democratic successor, Francisco I. Madero. Mexico's government in1913 was in the hands of the most recently successful revolutionary, General Victoriano Huerta, whose position as provisionalpresident was even then being challenged by rebellious forcesled by Venustiano Carranza.
Wilson refused to recognize the government of Huerta, a manwho antithesized the president's democratic ideals and moralisticconcept of the United States' interests in Mexico. Instead heformulated a mediation plan with the immediate objective of removing Huerta from power.
To implement his Mexican policy, Wilson chose Lind, a fairhaired, blue-eyed Scandinavian whose ideals were completely compatible with his own. Lind's Mexican sojourn began in August,1913, and ended eight months later in April, 1914. Functioning inan alien culture and innocent of diplomatic experience, the Minnesotan was not able to achieve the goals set forth in the mediationplan. After Huerta rejected Wilson's scheme, Lind's role changedto that of an adviser and observer reporting to the United StatesState Department.
It has been held that Lind's Mexican mission failed becauseWilson's approach to the elimination of Huerta -- that is, the
IThe quote is from George M. Stephenson, John Lind of Minnesota, 261 (Minneapolis, 1935).
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policy framework within which Lind operated -- was impractical.It has also been proposed, inversely, that a contributory cause offailure was the president's selection of an inexperienced representative. Despite Lind's lack of success in negotiating the mediation plan, he was without doubt influential in shaping laterpolicy and events. "The most significant aspect of the Lind mission, II states Kenneth J. Grieb, "was not its abortive attempt toget Huerta to resign, but that Lind's reports brought the Washington government to a more realistic view of the steps needed toimplement its policy. liZ
The microfilm edition of the Mexican Mission Papers of JohnLind described in this pamphlet is the society's first publicationissued independent of monetary support from the National Historical Publications Commission. The decision to launch the new series with the Lind title was based on the papers' demonstratedutility to scholars studying relations between Mexico and theUnited States as well as on an internal need for a better reference guide to the materials. The publication utilizes gUidelinesdistilled from experience gained in participating in NHPC projectsthat produced six titles and gave a new form to an old medium.
We acknowledge our indebtedness for the principles, practices,and format that constitute those guidelines to Helen M. white, director of the society's commission-supported project and formerassociate curator of manuscripts; Thomas F. Deahl, former curatorof newspapers; and June D. Holmquist, managing editor. We alsoexpress our appreciation for the direct contributions to the Lindedition made by Russell W. Fridley, director; John J. Wood, assistant director; Jean A. Brookins, assistant managing editor;the library staff; and last but far from least, Lawrence E. Bloom,the society's skillful microphotographer.
In addition to \vriting the Lind pamphlet, Deborah K. Neubeckprepared the manuscripts for filming and edited the microfilm. Aparticipant in the commission-sponsored series, she has now earnedthe society's additional thanks for the quality of this new contribution.
Lucile M. KaneCurator of ManuscriptsMinnesota Historical Society
August 27, 1971
2Grieb, "The Lind Mission to Mexico," in Caribbean Studies,7:43 (January, 1968).
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Contents
The Mexican Mission Papers of John Lind
Biographical Background
Historical Background .
Origin of the Collection
Description of the Papers
1913-1914.
1914-1916.
1917-1931-
Selected Bibliography
The Microfilm
Selected List of Authors
Subject Index
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Mexico
John Lind
The Mexican Mission PapersOf John Lind
The Mexican Mission Papers of John Lind (1913-31) in the manuscripts department of the Minnesota Historical Society recountLind's diplomatic mission to Mexico in 1913-14 as the personalrepresentative of President Woodrow Wilson and his continued involvement and interest in Mexican affairs after his return to theUnited States. These papers, which measure three and threefourths linear feet, were extracted from the society's larger collection of John Lind Papers. The remaining portion of the Lindcollection (1870-1912, 1917-33), which was not microfilmed, measures five linear feet.
This microfilm edition includes all items formerly in the LindPapers for the years 1913-16, most but not all of which deal withMexican affairs, plus those items for the period 1917-31 which relate to Mexico. The bulk of the papers filmed are for the years1913-14.
While most of the materials in the collection are legible andin good physical condition, there are exceptions. The ink on somecopies of coded telegraphic messages and letters typed on sulphitepaper has faded or blurred so that legibility is impaired. Also,cellophane tape used to repair letters and newspapers has damagedpaper and ink, occasionally making items difficult to read.
The Mexican Mission Papers are filmed in a Single, integratedsequence of correspondence and miscellaneous,papers on seven rollsof microfilm. Following the correspondence and miscellaneous papers on Roll 7 are copies of catalog cards listing the society'smanuscript and library holdings that relate to Lind and to pertinent facets of Mexican foreign relations, history, politics, andgovernment.
The papers are arranged and microfilmed in chronological
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order. Undated items appear on the film before dated ones. Enclosures, no matter what their date, have been filed whenever possible after the items in which they were enclosed. When there areboth Spanish and English versions of the same item, the originalversion is immediately followed by its translation. In the caseof coded diplomatic dispatches and telegrams all versions of thesame message usually are filmed consecutively in the following order: the coded message; its transcription; the original manuscriptdraft (of those sent by Lind); and any other existing versions.
The~2-B film format has been used in microfilming the manuscripts. A running title beneath each film frame gives the namesof the collection and the institution holding the original documents as well as the roll and frame numbers. Special targets indicate enclosures, incomplete or defective manuscripts. and thereduction ratio of the image when other than the standard 12 to 1was used. Sometimes a manuscript was filmed more than once withdifferent amounts of illumination when it was not possible toachieve legibility with a single exposure. In this case, an intentional duplicate exposure target was filmed with the duplicateframe. When an item was incorrectly filmed out of sequence withina few frames, it was not refilmed. Other items found out of placeand inserted into a film sequence are identified with letters following the frame number (as l63A).
Several aids to the reader appear at the beginning of each microfilm roll. A brief discussion of the Mexican Mission Papers isfollowed by two chronologies: selected lists of events in the lifeof Lind and in the history of the Mexican Revolution, 1910-20.The chronologies are followed by sample citations to items in thecollection and a list of the contents of each microfilm roll.
BIOGRAPHICAL BACKGROUND
When Lind was named by President Wilson as his personal representative to Mexico in August, 1913. he was virtually unknown in national political circles. In his home state of Minnesota. however, he was a prominent lawyer and politician who. as congressman and governor, had established a widespread reputation as aman far more committed to progressive principles and issues thanto party loyalty, a man who had once described himself as a "politicalorphan. 1I
Lind's appointment, eVidently made on the recommendation ofSecretary of State William Jennings Bryan. was as much a surpriseto him as it was to the American public. For Wilson had chosento send to Mexico on a mission of extreme delicacy a man with nodiplomatic experience, no knowledge of either Mexican affairs orthe Spanish language, and a strong anti-Catholic bias. His qual-
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ifications, aside from his personal and political loyalty to bothWilson and Bryan, were a reputedly circumspect attitude towardpublic statements and a strong independent spirit, which supposedly would enable him to resist partisan pressures in the executionof his mission.
This estimate of Lind's character proved to be only partiallyaccurate. On the one hand, during his stay in Mexico (August 9,19l3-April 6, 1914) and for several years thereafter, the newspapers made him well known to the people of the United States as"silent,. John Lind, II the tall, gaunt Swede who would not comment onMexican affairs. On the other hand, on those rare occasions whenLind issued statements for publication, he somehow managed to stirup a great deal of controversy. More importantly, he became astrong supporter of the Constitutionalist cause shortly after hisarrival in Mexico, and the conduct of his mission had neither theneutrality nor the objectivity that Wilson and Bryan had ostensibly desired.
Lind's preference for directness in speech and his impatienceto achieve tangible results made him temperamentally unsuited forthe role of diplomat. These qualities, together with the peculiarnature of his position, the manner in which the Wilson administration dealt with him and handled American-Mexican relations, andhis lack of familiarity with his surroundings, often caused Lindto feel frustrated and isolated in Mexico. But while he was eagerto return to Minnesota in June, 1914, and to resume the more comfortable roles of lawyer and political maverick, he maintained anavid interest in Mexico and in retrospect viewed his sojourn thereas the most "intensely interesting" period of his life.
A SELECTED LIST OF EVENTS IN THE LIFE OF JONN LIND
1854
1868
March 25. Born in ~nna parish, Smgland province, Sweden, eldest of five children born to Peter GustafJonasson and Katrina Jonasdotter.
Emigrated with family to United States; settled on afarm near Cannon Falls, Goodhue County, Minnesota.Father adopted name of Lind from name of family farm inSweden, "Lindbacken. II
Left hand amputated as a result of hunting accident.
1869-70 Attended public school in Red Wing, Goodhue County, Minnesota. Certified to teach 3rd grade.
1871 Taught school in Goodhue County.
1872 Moved with family to farm near Winthrop, Sibley County,Minnesota.
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1873 Taught school in Sibley County.
1874-75 Employed in law office of Jonas Newhart in New Ulm, BrownCounty, Minnesota. Studied law and taught school.
1875-76 Attended University of Minnesota. Taught night school.
1876
1877
1879
1880
1881
1884
1886
1890
1892
1893
1896
Returned to New Ulm to assist Newhart in law practice.
Admitted to Minnesota bar. Opened own law office in NewUlm.
Elected superintendent of schools for Brown County;served until 1879.
Married Alice A. Shepard, daughter of Richard and RowenaCharity Stratton Shepard.
First son, Norman, born.
Appointed receiver of United States land office at Tracy,Lyon County, Minnesota, by President James A. Garfield;served until 1885.
Formed partnership with Frank L. Randall in order to retain law practice in New Ulm.
Legal firm of Lind and Randall dissolved; succeeded byfirm of Lind and Carl A. Hagberg.
First daughter, Jenny, born.
First Swedish-born American to be elected to UnitedStates House of Representatives, from 2nd congressionaldistrict, Republican ticket; served 1887-93 in 50th,51st, and 52nd Congresses. During third term formedlasting friendship with Bryan, then representative fromNebraska. Primarily interested in the tariff, publiclands, enforcement of Interstate Commerce Act, Indianaffairs, bimetallism, railroads, shipping, postal telegraph, organized labor, and immigration restriction.
Second daughter, Winifred, born.
Declined to seek re-election to House of Representatives,in part because he did not feel in "full accord" withRepublican party on such "vital questions" as freecoinage of silver.
Resumed law practice in New Ulm.Appointed a regent of University of Minnesota by Gover
nor Knute Nelson; resigned in 1894.
Left Republican party over Free Silver issue. Supported
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1898
1900
1901
1902
1904
1908
1910
1912
presidential candidacy of Bryan, Democratic-People'sticket.
Defeated in bid for governorship of Minnesota, DemocratiC-Peaple's ticket, Free Silver platform.
Enlisted for service in Spanish-American War; served withrank of lieutenant as regimental quartermaster of the12th Minnesota Volunteers in Cuba; however, opposedUnited States policy of imperialism and retention ofPhilippine Islands.
Elected 14th governor of Minnesota, Democratic-Populistticket; served 1899-1901. Primarily concerned withtrust and railroad regulation, taxation, legal reform,public education, treatment of the insane, and organized labor.
Defeated for re-election as governor of Minnesota, Democratic-People's ticket. Campaign stressed trust regulation, imperialism, and militarism as primary nationalissues and taxation as paramount state issue.
Second son, John Shepard, born.
Transferred residence from New DIm to Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Formed law partnership with Andreas Ueland that was maintained until 1914.
Elected to United States House of Representatives from5th congressional district, Democratic ticket; served1903-05 in 58th Congress. Interested in interstatecommerce, public lands, Indian affairs, and the tariff.
Declined to seek re-election to House.
Campaigned for presidential candidate Bryan, Democraticticket.
Appointed to board of regents of University of Minnesotaby Governor John A. Johnson; served as president until1914.
Made Waldron M. Jerome a partner in law firm.
Declined Minnesota gubernatorial nomination, Democraticticket.
Worked for nomination of Wilson as Democratic candidatefor president.
Traveled with family to Europe.
1913 Declined to serve as assistant secretary of the interiorand as United States minister to Sweden.
Appointed by Wilson as his personal representative toMexico; served until 1914.
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1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1922
1923
1924
1928
1929
1930
Resumed law practice in Minneapolis.Supported Wilson's policy of neutrality with respect to
World War I.
Appointed chairman of Minnesota chapter of League to Enforce Peace by its president, former President WilliamHoward Taft.
Accepted invitation to Mexico to meet President Venustiano Carranza.
Campaigned for re-election of Wilson.
Supported United States' entry into World War T.Appointed to Minnesota Commission of Public Safety by
Governor Joseph A. A. Burnquist; resigned in 1918.
Appointed chairman of Advisory Council to the Secretaryof Labor and an umpire on National War Labor Board bySecretary of Labor William B. Wilson.
Supported National Nonpartisan League's candidate forgovernor of Minnesota, Charles A. Lindbergh, Sr., inRepublican primary election.
Supported Wilson's campaign for United States' entry intoLeague of Nations.
Daughter Jenny died.
Established Lind Fund for the Aid of Deserving CrippledChildren at University of Minnesota.
Supported Minnesota Farmer-Labor party's candidate forUnited States senator, Magnus Johnson.
Endorsed Progressive party's presidential and vice-presidential candidates, Robert M. La Follette and Burton K.Wheeler.
Supported Farmer-Labor party's candidates for Minnesotastate and national offices. Also supported them in1926 and 1928.
Opposed presidential candidacy of Alfred E. Smith, Democratic ticket. Supported Republican party's candidate,Herbert C. Hoover.
Appointed member of board of trustees of American Institute of Swedish Art, Literature, and Science.
September 18. Died in Minneapolis.
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HISTORICAL BACKGROUNO
When Wilson assumed the office of president of the United Statesin 1913, Mexico was in the throes of revolution. For the Mexicannation it was a period of guerrilla warfare, coups d'etat, andpolitical assassinations. As rival factions struggled for military and political control, anarchy and economic collapse constantly threatened. The situation was complicated by the factthat powerful governments (most notably that of the UnitedStatesJ, motivated by idealistic and economic interests, felt compelled to interfere in Mexican affairs. B~tween 1913 and 1915,President Wilson made the United States' relations with Mexicothe chief international issue of his administration. He and Secretary of State Bryan, neither of whom had previous experience inthe complex art of international diplomacy, embarked on a Mexicanpolicy that sprang primarily from moralistic and idealistic impulses: the re-establishment of social, economic, and politicalorder through the elimination of military dictator VictorianoHuerta and the creation of a democratically elected constitutionalgovernment. The policy was doomed to fail from the beginning, because it was based on unrealistic assumptions about and inaccurateappraisals of the Mexican situation.
Wilson and Bryan tried various methods of achieving theirgoals. First, they rejected the historic American practice ofrecognizing de facto governments and withheld recognition fromthe Huerta regi~When this action brought no results, they devised a mediation scheme designed to force Huerta's resignationand the holding of free elections. Lind was sent to Mexico topresent the mediation offer and to exert diplomatic pressure forits acceptance. Because sending an ambassador would have been inconsistent with Wilson's policy of nonrecognition, Lind was giventhe ambiguous title of "personal representative ll
; clearly, however, he was to act in an ambassadorial capacity. When Huertarefused the terms of the plan (see page 9), Lind was instructedto remain in Mexico in the crucial role of observer and reporter,while Wilson and Bryan next embarked on a policy of "watchfulwaiting. II Following another unsuccessful attempt to forceHuerta's resignation, "watchful waiting lT was abandoned in favor ofencouraging the Constitutionalist forces opposed to Huerta and using direct military coercion in the occupation of Veracruz (bothstrongly advocated by Lind). Eventually, in 1914, the Constitutionalist military forces drove Huerta from power, and their"First Chief,1T Carranza, assumed control of the government without holding elections. Although Huerta had been eliminated,Mexico seemed no closer to stability through democracy than ithad been before.
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The Constitutionalist ranks soon split. Carranza was challenged both militarily and politically by such former allies asFrancisco (Pancho) Villa and Emiliano Zapata, who were referredto as Conventionists after the Convention of Aquascalientes. Wilson and Bryan, having discovered that Carranza was as stubbornlyunwilling to allow the United States to interfere in Mexico's internal affairs as Huerta had been, switched their allegiance fora time from the lIFirst Chief" to the Conventionist forces opposing him. In 1915, however, as the Constitutionalists managed tocontinue in power, and as Wilson found his attention drawn moreand more from Mexico to the crisis in Europe, he granted recognition to the Carranza government. Except for the Punitive Expedition sent into Mexico against Villa in 1916; the United States,with its ultimate policy objectives still not achieved, withdrewfrom its intense involvement in Mexican affairs and left one ofthe most important revolutions of the twentieth century to runits own course.
A SELECTED LIST OF EVENTSIN THE HISTORY OF THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION, 1910-20.
1910
1911
1913
Henry Lane Wilson appointed United States ambassador toMexico by President Taft.
Porfirio D1az, dictator of Mexico since 1876, re-electedpresident.
Anti-Dlaz revolution launched by Francisco t. Madero withPlan of San Luis Potosi; supported by Carranza, Villa,and Zapata. Madero proclaimed himself provisionalpresident.
Madero revolution succeeded. niaz resigned as president.Madero elected president; faced with revolts that contin
ued through 1912.Taft recognized Madero government.
FebruaryMadero overthrown by Huerta in coup d'etat; Huerta pro
claimed himself provisional president until October,1913, elections. Madero executed.
Outgoing President Taft withheld United States' recognition of Huerta government.
MarchPresident Wilson refused to grant United States' recog
nition to Huerta government because of unlawful methodof seizing power. Although he broke with traditionalUnited States policy of recognizing de facto governments, decided to maintain informal relations withMexican government.
Carranza elected "First Chief" by Constitutionalist
8
1914
forces (which included Villa and Zapata) orgau1z1ugagainst Huerta. Proclaimed revolt with announcement ofPlan of Guadalupe.
JulyWilson and Bryan formulated Mexican policy committed to
removal of Huerta from power and establislunent of democratically elected constitutional government.
Henry Lane Wilson recalled to United States.AugustLind appointed Wilson's personal representative to Mexico
to mediate situation, i.e., to negotiate Huerta's elimination. Mission a failure; Huerta rejected Wilson'sterms: (1) immediate cessation of fighting and an armistice; (2) early and free elections participated inby all; (3) pledge by Huerta not to be a presidentialcandidate in elections; (4) agreement by all parties toaccept results of elections.
Wilson announced official United States Mexican policy asthat of "watchful waiting ll
; imposed embargo on armsshipments from United States to Mexico. Lind instructed to remain in Veracruz to observe and report on situation.
OctoberVilla forces captured Huerta stronghold of Torreon.Huerta dissolved Mexican Congress, arrested deputies, and
assumed dictatorial powers until elections.Elections held; subsequently declared null and void by
Congress, which appointed Huerta provisional presidentuntil July, 1914, elections.
Wilson and Bryan abandoned United States policy of"watchful waiting" and decided to reopen active campaign to eliminate Huerta.
NovemberUnited States, through Lind, renewed efforts to force
Huerta to resign; he refused.At Wilson's request, William Bayard Hale negotiated with
Carranza conditions for United States' support: lifting of arms embargo in exchange for acceptance ofUnited States' mediation plan and guarantee of protection for American lives and property. Mission a failure; Carranza rejected United States' presumed rightto intervene in internal affairs of Mexico.
Villa forces captured Ciudad Juarez from governmenttroops.
Wilson announced return to policy of "watchful waiting. 1I
DecemberHuerta forces recaptured Torre6n.
JanuaryLind and Wilson conferred about Mexican situation at Pass
Christian, Mississippi.
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Carranza sent personal agent, Luis Cabrera, to Washington,D.C., to confer with Wilson.
Wilson announced new policy of support for Constitution-alists.
FebruaryWilson revoked arms embargo.AprilVilla forces recaptured Torreon.Lind returned to United States.Tampico incident: commander of United States naval squad~ ron at Tampico demanded that American flag be raised
and given twenty-one-gun salute by Mexican commander asreparation for arrest of several American sailors,since released. Huerta refused to grant authority forsalute.
United States mail courier arrested at Veracruz by Mexican soldier.
Official State Department dispatch delayed by Mexicancensor at Mexico City.
On pretext of halting arms shipments to Huerta, Wilsonordered United States military forces to occupy Veracruz in retaliation for above three events. Huertasevered diplomatic relations with United States.
Wilson reimposed arms embargo in retaliation for Carranza's hostile attitude toward occupation of Veracruz.
Argentine, Brazilian, and Chilean envoys in Washingtonoffered to mediate conflict between United States andMexico; offer accepted.
May-JuneA.B.C. Mediation Conference held in Niagara Falls, Can
ada; settled little.JulyHuerta resigned and fled to Europe, yielding presidency
to Francisco S. Carbajal.Villa, plotting overthrow of Carranza as IlFirst Chief,"
sought United States' support.AugustWilson and Bryan unofficially encouraged Villa's efforts.
Official United States policy remained one of noninvolvement in Mexico's internal affairs.
Constitutionalist forces led by Carranza's general,Alvaro Obreg6n, occupied Mexico City; Carbajal surrendered government to Carranza.
OctoberConvention of anti-Carranza forces (including Villa and
Zapata) met at Aquascalientes.NovemberConvention of Aquascalientes elected General Eulalio
Gutierrez provisional president. Carranza refused toresign and was declared a rebel by members of convention. Villa called country to arms, precipitating newstage in civil war.
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1915
1916
Carranza moved government from Mexico City to Veracruzupon withdrawal of United States forces. Conventionist government established in Mexico City.
DecemberUnited States government ignored Carranza government, in
effect breaking off de facto relations; established defacto relations with-Conventionist government.
Military battles throughout year between forces of Villaand Obreg6n. Villa ultimately defeated.
Carranza refused to recognize subsequent presidents elected by Convention of Aquascalientes (Roque Gonzales Garza and Francisco Lago Chazara). Re-established Constitutionalist government in Mexico City upon withdrawalof Conventionist forces.
Huerta, plotting rebellion against Carranza, enteredUnited States from Europe; arrested by government officials in Texas.
United States resumed de facto relations with Carranza;maintained official policy of nonintervention in Mexican affairs, but in reality vacillated between involvement and noninvolvement, support of Villa and supportof Carranza.
Pan-American Conference met in Washington; granted defacto recognition to Carranza government. UnitedStates government subsequently granted de facto recognition.
Huerta died in Texas of natural causes.
Villa raided town of Columbus, New Mexico, in retaliation for United States' recognition of Carranza. Wilson sent Punitive Expedition against him under commandof General John J. Pershing; expedition remained inMexico almost a year but failed to capture Villa.
Carranza called constitutional convention.
1917 Constitution adopted.son extended de jurement.
Carranza elected president. Wilrecognition to Carranza govern-
1919
1920
Zapata killed by government troops.Carranza refused to support presidential candidacy of his
ally, Obregon; insistently advocated election ofIgnacio Bonillas. Situation precipitated break betweenObregon and Carranza.
Successful rebellion against Carranza led by Obreg6n.Carranza killed while fleeing from rebel forces.
Mexican Congress elected Adolfo de la Huerta provisionalpresident. Obregon elected president in general elections.
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Postscript1923 Villa assassinated by hired gunmen in town of Parral.
ORIGIN OF THE COLLECTION
Most of the manuscripts that now constitute the Mexican MissionPapers of John Lind were included in the John Lind Papers given tothe so~iety by Mrs. John Lind in January, 1936. Additional Mexican items were contributed to the collection in September, 1958,by Mrs. Edwin R. Bjorkman, a granddaughter of Lind. In January,1962, Alvin R. Witt presented to the society a copy of a letter inhis possession from Wilson to Lind, dated June 17, 1913. In Marchof the same year, Witt donated a copy of a letter from Bryan toLind, dated December 12, [19l4?], which had been given to him byJohn Lind, Jr. Twenty-eight issues of the Mexican Herald, datedApril 25-May 22, 1914, were discovered tn the newspaper divisionof the society's library and added to the collection during thepreparation of this microfilm edition. Their origin is unknown.
OESCRIPTION OF THE PAPERS
1913-1914
Following two undated items, the Mexican Mission Papers of JohnLind begin in January, 1913, with a few manuscripts which predateLind's diplomatic assignment and which deal with other facets ofhis career: correspondence regarding his law practice, his workas president of the board of regents of the University of Minnesota, political patronage, President Wilson's offer of the post ofUnited States minister to Sweden, and Lind's decision to declinethe position.
Manuscripts pertaining to the Mexican mission begin in lateJuly, 1913, with telegrams from Secretary of State Bryan summoningLind to Washington for consultation on an "important" and "confidential" matter. Materials from early August, 1913, includeLind's official letter of introduction; a copy of Wilson's instructions listing the terms of the United States' mediation proposal; newspaper clippings reporting Lind's appointment and arrival in Mexico; and letters of congratulation and introduction,many of them from Americans residing in Mexico. Also filed inAugust, 1913, are several groups of documents undoubtedly generated sometime during Lind's stay in Mexico: numerous alphabetically arranged calling cards; picture postcards portraying Lind onboard the U.S.S. "Michigan," Mexican architecture, and Mexicanrevolutionary leaders and activities; and Zapata's revolutionarymanifesto, Plan de Ayala.
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The records which date from Lind's arrival in Mexico in August, 1913, to his departure in April, 1914, consist primarily ofdiplomatic dispatches, letters from informants, printed materials,and copies of official documents. The heart of the Mexican Mission Papers are the diplomatic dispatches, in which government officials in Washington and diplomats in Veracruz and Mexico Citykept one another informed of local developments. The bulk of thedispatches are from Lind to Bryan, usually in both coded andtranscribed forms, sometimes with Lind's original draft attached.A lesser number from Bryan to Lind are present, as well as somewhich ~ere exchanged between Lind and Nelson O'Shaughnessy, charged'affaires at the American embassy in Mexi~o City.
In his efforts to give the Wilson administration as complete apicture as possible of the social, economic, political, military,and religious conditions in Mexico, Lind packed his dispatcheswith diverse types of information. First, he reported what heconsidered and what appear to be actual, confirmed events, suchas those he had witnessed or which had been reported in the press,verified by corroborating documents, or established as fact insome other way. Among such events are those relating to his negotiations with the Huerta government; incidents surrounding theOctober, 1913, elections; the request of presidential candidateFelix Dlaz for asylum in the United States consulate in Veracruz;the arrival of arms and fuel shipments for Huerta from Europe; theconduct of Mexican governmental affairs, such as the convening ofCongress and changes in Huerta's cabinet; the progress of important military campaigns and battles; and the financial crises continually plaguing the government.
Second, Lind relayed reports of unverified events (oftentransmitted to him by informants) which seemingly had the statusof rumors, such as supposed arrests and executions carried out bythe Mexican government; secret alliances and agreements enteredinto by Huerta with the business community and the Catholicchurch; and uprisings being planned by anti-Huerta partisans.Lind did not always clearly indicate, however, whether the information contained in his messages more closely resembled rumor orfact, and he sometimes tended to confuse the two and to exaggeratesituations. For example, he repeatedly warned that the principalBritish oil investor in Mexico, Lord Cowdray (Weetman D. Pearson)of the firm of S. Pearson and Son, Ltd., had resolved to controland monopolize the Mexican oil industry; that in pursuit of thisgoal the Englishman had already consolidated his position to theextent that he dictated the Mexican policy of Great Britain andcontrolled the Huerta government; and that he was determined toembarrass the United States and thwart its policies. Lind furthercontended that the British minister to Mexico, Sir Lionel E. Carden, was acting as Cowdray's agent and was, therefore, party tothese Machiavellian intrigues. Lind's belief in the existence ofthis conspiracy became an obsession; his accusations concerning
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it, his determination to expose it, and his insistence that Cardenbe replaced are major themes in his dispatches.
Third, Lind reported what are clearly his personal opinions,impressions, and interpretations and r~commended strategies andtactics he believed ought to be employed by the Wilson administration. He conveyed his negative views of the Irish, the Jews, theCatholic church, and the Mexicans, especially those in southernMexico; his convictions that the fundamental causes of unrest inMexico were not political but social and economic and that the establis~ent of political stability was ultimately dependent on reforms in the feudal agrarian system; his es~imate of what coursethe principal revolutionary leaders would follow; his firm beliefthat, because the Mexicans understood only power and force, Wilsonand Bryan had to develop a well-thought-out policy and plan of action, adhere to them without vacillation, and apply and maintainpressure at every point if they were to achieve their goals; andhis deepening sense of frustration as he began to realize thatsuch a policy and plan did not exist and that Huerta could repeatedly call the administration's bluff.
As his feelings of frustration and lack of accomplishmentmounted, Lind began to fill his dispatches with recommendationsdesigned to precipitate decisive action. Initially he argued thatsince the Constitutionalists would ultimately defeat Huerta, itwould be wise for Wilson to recognize them} for, in the likelyevent that United States military intervention became necessary topacify the country, the Americans would then have the good will ofthe faction in power. He subsequently decided, however, that itwould be more expedient and far wiser for the United States toachieve its objectives indirectly. If the fa~ade of neutralitywere abandoned, public support granted to the Constitutionalists,and the arms embargo lifted, the Constitutionalists would have themeans to achieve what seemingly could no~ b~ effected through direct diplomatic pressure -- the ousting of Huerta and the establishment of democracy and stability. This proposal, Lind argued,was the only alternative to military intervention, which wouldarouse intense hostility among the Mexicans toward the UnitedStates.
Shortly before his departure, Lind was recommending that theUnited States aid the rebels in seizing the gulf ports of Tampicoand Veracruz in order to halt the flow of arms and fuel to ,theHuerta government and to establish a base of operations from whicha semblance of law and order could radiate. But since Lind was nolonger in Mexico during the Tampico incident and the UnitedStates' occupation of Veracruz, there is very little in the papersrelating to these important events.
In his replies, Bryan generally acknowledged Lind's messages,reported that the information and recommendations they contained
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were recelVlng careful consideration, informed him of the administration's decisions and actions, assured him of the importanceof his contributions, or occasionally requested documentation forhis statements. Lind was irritated by the lack of specific information he received; he felt that Wilson and Bryan did not always keep him fully advised 6f the administration's policy and ofits reaction to his dispatches. For the most part, Bryan's messages indicate neither the manner in which the decision-makingprocess in Washington operated nor the nature or extent of Lind'sinfluence on it.
The dispatches exchanged between Lind a~d O'Shaughnessy wereprimarily intended to inform one another of their plans, of developments in their respective cities, and of significant intelligence forwarded to or received from Washington.
Next to the dispatches, the richest manuscripts in the collection are the letters, memoranda, and reports sent to Lind by people in Mexico whose positions enabled them to inform and advisehim about various aspects of the Mexican situation: Federico Adamsrepresented Lord Cowdray's oil interests in Mexico; James N. Galbraith was connected with the Waters Pierce Oil Company of Tampico; George R. Hackley was an executive of the Southern PacificRailroad of Mexico; Sloan W. Emery managed an experimental hacienda owned by the University of Minnesota; J. J. Slade, Jr., was abusinessman; Loring Olmstead managed the British Club in MexicoCity; Louis d'Antin was first clerk and legal counsel in theUnited States embassy in Mexico City; Robert H. Murray was theMexican correspondent for the New York World; William A. Burnsidewas United States military attache in Mexico City; Frank F.Fletcher and William A. Moffett were officers in the United StatesNavy. A comparison of the content of these manuscripts with thatof the dispatches suggests that while Lind did receive communiquesfrom and hold meetings with native-born Mexicans and other individuals, he usually relied more heavily on the diverse data received from foreign-born, English-speaking confidants in formulating both his reports to Washington and his own opinions. Thiscircumstance necessarily put severe limitations on the perspectivefrom which he and officials in Washington viewed Mexican affairs.
Printed materials in the papers include newspapers, magazines,and clippings as well as pamphlets, leaflets, flyers, and broadsides in both English and Spanish which Lind either collected himself or received from others during his Mexican sojourn. Withcopies of official government documents, they supplement the information in the dispatches and other correspondence and give anadded dimension to the topics discussed.
Non-Mexican items of interest for this period include correspondence and newspaper clippings pertaining to the political implications of Lind's resignation from the board of regents of theUniversity of Minnesota.
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1914-1916
Lind returned to the United States in mid-April, 1914. He hadhoped to proceed home to Minnesota but was detained in Washingtonuntil early June, 1914, by the A.B.C. Mediation Conference calledduring the crisis in American-Mexican relations following the occupation of Veracruz. That Lind played a pivotal role in theconference negotiations by serving as an adviser not only to theState Department but also to the Constitutionalists is amply revealed in the papers. Copies of letters, memoranda, and reportssubmitted by Lind to Wilson and Bryan give his assessment of theconference and outline his policy recommendations, which stronglyfavored the Constitutionalists. Comparison of his handwrittendrafts and notations with copies of official Constitutionalistcommunications indicates that statements he composed were oftenreleased by the Carranzistas essentially as he wrote them.
The papers also disclose that Lind's delicate position wasfurther complicated by his serving as a liaison between Zapata andthe State Department. This involvement proceeded from a commitmentmade shortly before leaving Mexico to Zapata sympathizers HerbertL. Hall, an American who had resided in Mexico for over twentyyears, and Arnold Shanklin, the United States consul general atMexico City. Zapata was attempting to blackmail the United Statesgovernment into sending him money, arms, and relief supplies bythreatening to attack Mexico City, thereby jeopardizing the mediation negotiations. Copies of telegrams indicate that Zapata's demands and Bryan's replies were transmitted in "underground messages" through intermediaries Shanklin in Mexico City and Lind incare of the State Department. The key figures in the situationwere referred to in these messages by code names -- Lind was knownas Juarez, Zapata as Dix, Shanklin as Paz, Hall as Clark, and aGeneral Martinez as Brady.
It is obvious from the correspondence, newspaper and magazinearticles, pamphlets, flyers, news releases, information sheets,copies of official documents, and other materials in the collection for this period that Lind's concern with Mexican affairs didnot wane when he returned to Minnesota after severing his officialconnection with the State Department. Through letters and memoranda he continued to submit to Secretaries of State Bryan andRobert Lansing and Secretary of the Interior Franklin K. Lane hisviews of the Mexican situation. He passed on to them informationreceived from informants and urgently pressed the necessity ofrecognizing the Carranza government as the only alternative tomilitary intervention.
Lind kept abreast of and undoubtedly influenced developmentsin the vigorous campaign for recognition being waged by Carranza'srepresentatives in the United States through contacts with suchmen as Charles A. Douglas, their chief counsel, and Eliseo
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Arredondo, the "First Chief's" confidential agent and head of theConstitutionalist mission in Washington. In correspondence andduring periodic trips to the East at critical times to give advicein person, Lind suggested actions to be taken and drafted statements for public release. Both before and after the United Statesgranted de facto recognition, Lind persistently recommended thatthe Constitutionalists mount a publicity effort to counteract theanti-Carranza campaign of the American Catholic church.
Lind also kept up a lively correspondence with friends and informan~s who continued to supply him with data on conditions inMexico and developments in Mexican-American relations. Some ofthe subjects discussed in these letters are· the continuation ofthe alleged anti-American conspiracy of Carden and the English oilinterests; the feud between Villa and Carranza and the anti-Carranza rebellion launched by Villa; and various public and privateMexican relief efforts.
Also in the papers are some letters and numerous newspaperclippings about the reported break between President Wilson andhis adviser, Colonel Edward M. House; Lind's allegations that theformer ambassador to Mexico, Henry Lane Wilson, had prior knowledge of Huerta's coup ~'etat and the plan to execute PresidentMadero; Lind's trip to the Mexican town of Piedras Negras to meetthe I'First Chief" and the speculation that he would be named ambassador to Mexico; the anti-Constitutionalist attitude of theAmerican Catholic church and press; the pressure for military intervention by the United States in Mexico; and the Punitive Expedition against Villa led by General Pershing. Lind's speechabout Mexico to the Industrial Club of Chicago in November, 1914,prompted many comments by correspondents, particularly in reference to charges of plagiarism and anti-Catholicism that followedits publication in the Bellman and in pamphlet form under the title The Mexican People. There are also requests for copies ofthe pamphlet.
Non-Mexican topics of interest include World War I and Lind'shearty approval of Wilson's policy of neutrality; the election of1916, in which Lind campaigned for Wilson's re-election; and therequest by former President Taft that Lind serve as chairman ofthe Minnesota chapter of the League to Enforce Peace.
1917-1931
Materials photographed for the period 1917-31 consist only ofthose items from the Lind Papers that relate to Mexico. They fallinto four major categories: (1) correspondence between Lind andpersons he had met during the course of his Mexican endeavorswhose occasional letters inform him about mutual friends, reporton conditions in Mexico, or ask his assistance in securing jobs;(2) letters and newspaper clippings pertaining to Mexico's role in
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World War I, including correspondence discussing Lind's scheme torecruit an independent Mexican brigade for service in France, anaction that he believed would foster closer relations between thepeoples of the United States and Mexico in the face of Carranza'scontinued insistence on Mexican neutrality; (3) correspondence relating to legal work Lind performed in 1917 on behalf of a clientwho owned a hacienda in the Mexican state of Oaxaca; (4) printedpamphlets on various social, economic, political, and religiousaspects of the Mexican situation.
Oth~r notable items are newspaper clippings regarding the activities of Villa and the withdrawal of the ,Punitive Expeditionfrom Mexico; a copy of a speech made by Lind at a Loyalty Day rally sponsored by organized labor in September, 1917, in which herefers to Wilson's Mexican policy in the course of urging supportfor the president's revised war policy; materials regarding Lind'stestimony before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, whichin 1919-20 conducted an investigation of Mexican affairs; and letters exchanged between Lind and several magazine and newspaper editors seeking articles or interviews about Mexico, some of whichcontain interesting reminiscences.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
George M. Stephenson discusses the Mexican phase of Lind's careerat some length in his biography, John Lind of Minnesota (Minneapolis, 1935). The last four volumes of Arthur-S. Link's five-volumebiography of Woodrow Wilson each contain chapters detailing various phases of United States Mexican policy for the years 1913-17:Wilson: The New Freedom; Wilson: The Struggle for Neutrality,1914-1915; Wilson: Confusions and Crises, 1915-1916; and Wilson:Campaigns for Progressivism and Peace, 1916-1917 (Princeton, 1956,1960, 1964, 1965). Additional secondary sources in English dealing with the Mexican Revolution and relations between the UnitedStates and Mexico during this period include Ronald Atkin, Revolution! Mexico 1910-1920 (London, 1969); Howard F. Cline, The United~es and Mexico (Cambridge, Mass~, 1963); Kenneth J. Grieb,liThe Lind Mission to Mexico" in Caribbean Studies, 7:25-43 (January, 1968), and The United States and Huerta (Lincoln, Neb.,1969); Robert E. Quirk, The Mexican Revolution, 1914-1915: TheConvention of Aquasca1ientes (Bloomington, In9., 1960); James W.Wilkie and Albert L. Michaels, eds., Revolution in Mexico: Yearsof Upheaval, 1910-1940 (New York, 1969).
Useful for information about more specific aspects of UnitedStates Mexican policy are Peter Calvert, The Mexican Revolution,1910-1914: The Diplomacy of the Ang1o-Ame~anConflict (London,1968) and Robert E. Quirk, An Affair of Honor: WOodrow Wilson andthe Occupation of Veracruz (Lexington~K~962). All of the---
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books listed above contain extensive bibliographies of primaryand secondary sources in both English and Spanish.
The following government publications also are helpful: UnitedStates Department of State, Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, 1913-17, 5 volumes (Washington, 1920,1922, 192~1925, 1926); and United States Senate Committee onForeign Relations, Investigation of Mexican Affairs, 66 Congress,2 session, 2 volumes (Washington, 1920).
The numerical files of the Department of State records in theNational Archives which contain the greater part of the officialpapers pertaining to the United States' relations with Mexico forthis period are in Record Group 59. The most important of theseis the 812.00 file, "Records Relating to the Internal Affairs ofMexico. 1910-1929. 11 The 711.12 file, entitled "Records RegardingPolitical Relations Between the United States and Mexico. 19101929, Il includes some additional materials. Microfilm copies ofboth files (accompanied by pamphlet inventories) may be purchasedfrom the National Archives as Microcopies 274 and' 314. respectively. RollI of each of these microfilm publications is available at the Minnesota Historical Society. These rolls contain"Lists of Documents. II Le., brief abstracts of the items reproduced in the microcopies which also serve as finding aids. RollIof Microcopy 274 covers only the period February, 1910-March,1914. while Roll 1 of Microcopy 314 lists documents for the entireperiod.
Additional manuscript and printed sources on Lind and on pertinent facets of Mexico's foreign relations, history, politics,and government in the manuscripts department and library of theMinnesota Historical Society are indicated in the catalog cardsfilmed on Roll 7 of the microfilm.
THE MICROFILM
The Mexican Mission Papers of John Lind
Correspondence and Miscellaneous Papers
Roll 1Roll 2.Roll 3.Roll 4.Roll 5.Roll 6.Roll 7.
Undated, January-October 15, 1913October 16-November, 1913December, 1913-February 10, 1914February II-April 15, 1914April 16, 19l4-February, 1915March-December, 19151916-31; Catalog Cards
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SELECTED LIST OF AUTHORS
Adams, FedericoArredondo, Elisee
Bonhomme, JosephinaBonillas, IgnacioBryan, William JenningsBurleson, Albert S.Burnsiqe, William A.Butler,~ Pierce
Cabrera, LuisCanada, William W.Canova, Leon J.Capehart, Edward E.Carranza, VenustianoCarbajal, Francisco S.Catholic BulletinClark, Victor S.Cole, Edwin L.Cole, Richard H.Cowdray, First Viscount
(Weetman D. Pearson)
Daniels, JosephusD'Antin, Louisnfaz, FelixEl DictamenDomlnguez~ BelisarioDomfnguez, ZeferinoDouglas, Charles A.
Eberhart, Adolph O.Edgar, William C.Ellis, W. H.Emery, Sloan W.Enrlquez, Ignacio C.
Fahlcrantz, G.Farquhar, Arthur B.Fentress, CalvinFletcher, Frank F.Flores Mag6n, Jesus
Galbraith, James N.Gamboa, FedericoGarza, Emeterio de la, Jr.Gray, JamesGuzman, Reynalda Ram6n vda de
Hackley, George R.Hale, William BayardHall, Herbert L.Hammond, Winfield S.House, Edward M.Huerta, Victoriano
El Imparcial
Kelley, Francis C.Knox, Philander C.
Lane, Franklin K.Lansing, RobertLeckie, A. E. L.Lind, Alice (Mrs. John)Lind, JohnLind, Norman
Maass, GustavoMacEachran, Clinton E.McGee, John F.The MenaceMetcalfe, Richard L.Mexican Bureau of InformationMexican HeraldMiller, Clarence A.Minneapolis JournalMinneapolis StarMister LindMoffett, William A.Moore, John BassettMurray, Robert H.
New York HeraldNew York Times--------El Noticioso MexicanoNorthrop, Cyrus
Oliver, James H.Olmstead, LoringLa OpinionO'Shaughnessy, NelsonOur Sunday Visitor
El PaisPalavicini, Felix F.Post, Louis F.La PrensaEl Pueblo
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Roosevelt, Franklin D.
St. Paul Pioneer PressSala, AntenorSchmahl, Julius A.Shanklin, ArnoldShipstead, HenrikSimpson, Williard L.Slade, J. J., Jr.Slaughter, John W.Steffeas, Joseph LincolnLos Sucesos
Tumulty, Joseph P.Tupper, Henry A.
El UniversalUntermyer, SamuelUrquidi, Juan F.
SUBJECT INDEX
Velasquez, JacoboVilla, FranciscoVillarreal, Antonio I.Vincent, George E.Von Rosen, A. L.
Watson, Thomas E.Washington HeraldWashington PostWashington TimesWest, DuvalWestern CatholicWilson, Henry LaneWilson, Woodrow
Zapata, EmilianoZubaran Capmany, Rafael
European War (World War I), 1914-18
Mexico: Churches and religious affairsEconomic conditionsElections and election campaignsForeign investmentsForeign relations -- Great Britain, United StatesPolitics and governmentRevolutionary period, 1910-17Social conditions
Minnesota: Politics and government
United States: Diplomatic and consular serviceElections and election campaignsForeign relations -- MexicoPolitics and government
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